ABC: The Alphabetization of the Popular MindVintage Books, 1989 - 187 頁 An intense examination of the effects of technology on literacy and language. The authors argue that there is a phenomenon transforming modern culture--language is becoming part of a technology of "information systems" with an emphasis on control, rather than human exchange. As a result, all language is becoming debased. |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 7 筆
第 8 頁
... listener ( who might be an angel or God ) , speech could not be perceived as anything but madness , because speech courts attention . And before this sound - recording through the alphabet , a listener could not be perceived as a ...
... listener ( who might be an angel or God ) , speech could not be perceived as anything but madness , because speech courts attention . And before this sound - recording through the alphabet , a listener could not be perceived as a ...
第 87 頁
... listener was turned by the early Scholastics into the moral obligation to reveal the truth . Only against this background can it be understood what it means to say that the Age of European Literacy is the World of Fiction . As much as ...
... listener was turned by the early Scholastics into the moral obligation to reveal the truth . Only against this background can it be understood what it means to say that the Age of European Literacy is the World of Fiction . As much as ...
第 88 頁
... listener to grasp , the subordinate clause , which requires the listener to hold the sense of the dependent clause steadily in mind , suspending the fulfillment of meaning that the independent clause promises to deliver . Chaucer ...
... listener to grasp , the subordinate clause , which requires the listener to hold the sense of the dependent clause steadily in mind , suspending the fulfillment of meaning that the independent clause promises to deliver . Chaucer ...
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常見字詞
Adams alphabet autobiography became become Beowulf Book of Kells Cambridge Canterbury Tales Charlemagne charters Chaucer Clanchy Classical copy created culture Curtius Daly Defoe dictation document English epic existence fiction formula Franklin German Greek Grundmann guage guslar Herodotus Hildegard von Bingen historian Homer Huck Huck's idea Iliad illiterate invention Journal language Latin letters Library linguistic listener literacy literate logograms meaning Medieval memory Middle Ages Milman Parry Mittelalter Mnemosyne modern monks Nebrija Newspeak Nithard O'Brian oath Ohly Oral Literature oral tradition Orwell Parry Parry's person Peter the Venerable phonetic plague Plato poem Poetry printing pronunciation reader recollection record reference rhetoric Riché Romance scribe script sense silence song sounds speak speaker speech spoken Steiner story Strasbourg Oaths tell Theuth things thirteenth century tongue translation truth Twain twelfth century Uniquack University Press utterance vernacular Winston word writing written